Do you have a problem with Bob Bradley?
simonireland | September 3rd, 2010 | No Comments »Well done Bob Bradley, you get to keep your job, for now.
There were probably some pretty good odds that Bradley would not get to stay on as US National team coach. But, I don’t think that is big news when you consider that the US job is not really such a sort after position by the so called world elite of football coaches & managers.
For one simple reason. What do you have to work with?
Let’s face it, the talent pool is not very deep, and even when you consider the cream of that crop, well it is hardly an A List of talent.
Bob Bradley does as much as anyone, and I mean anyone (Sir Alex, Mourihno, Capello, Ancelotti & the like) could do with his pool of players.
At the WC 2010, the US played to their strengths in South Africa, and got as far, or further than a squad like the US can go. I reckon they did just fine. So yes, well done Bradley. I personally have no problem with him staying in charge, given that he does already know the domestic scene inside out from college to Pro, he is realistically grounded as far as his player pool & subsequent tactical options, blending exiting veterans & blooding emerging players. Not to mention the fact that a newcomer, an outsider, would be coming into the often fractious & complex ‘behind the scenes political structure’ that is US soccer.
To be fair to the man, the problem in the US is not at the top of the game really, it is rooted at the youth development level. So I think that people are getting ahead of themselves when talking about the US as a powerhouse. That may in fact never happen. There are too many problems at the bottom of the pile, the foundations are weak, the fundamentals are lacking, the player development and emphasis is missing a huge component. SKILL ! Technical ability to use the ball. Just a bit important I would say.
Football is a culture, and though the US has now established itself as a participator in world events, and a regional titan, the domestic realities are going to be a huge hurdle.
Soccer/Football in America is full of really nice people. It is, well, more nice people than rotten ones anyway. But being nice is not a qualification for successful coaching/teaching youth development. The game is also full of parents…….nothing wrong with parents, I am a father of two.
But, you know the kind I’m talking about. They start out getting involved in the game because they have a kid on a team, and several years later, they are still ‘in the way’ (Or, the person ends up being a general secretary of a Federation) And because the youth soccer association coaching programs in the US virtually give away licenses, we end up top heavy with very poor teaching/educational/developmental leadership.
YES, I say Bob Bradley is the right man for the US.
I just hope that his vision for the future of the game in the US, includes the improvement of coaching/teaching talent through the promotion of a fundamentally sound directive for individual technical comprehension of the ball.
But will he? I doubt it. Not because he is unaware of this HUGE domestic problem in the youth game, but because he has an agenda that is given to him……WIN……or you are out of here.
Time will tell if Bradley makes it to the end of 2014, and I hope he does, but it will only be because of the National Team results, and not because he implements what I’ve already suggested is needed.
Ultimately, things have to change, because without the Egg, one day there will be no chicken.
Good luck Bob.